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Mailbox: An apology to Ohio State coach Ryan Day, and kudos to him for taking the cash

Have more comments, questions? Reach out to me at bwhite1@dispatch.com.

Ohio State Buckeyes head coach Ryan Day speaks to media during a press conference prior to the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles on Dec. 31, 2021.
Ohio State Buckeyes head coach Ryan Day speaks to media during a press conference prior to the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles on Dec. 31, 2021.

On Ryan Day's salary

To Brian: I want to publicly apologize to coach Ryan Day for poking fun at him in last week’s letter. The truth is, coach Day is an excellent coach and a gentleman, and more than capable of leading OSU to a national championship. And as to his salary, if the market dictates $9 million a year, absurd as that figure seems to me, he has every right to accept it. Go Bucks!

Thad Woodman, Westerville

To the editor: I grew up living behind Woody Hayes. He lived in a modest home in Upper Arlington, 2 miles from the Horseshoe. He would leave every morning for work at 6:30 a.m. and return every evening at 5:30 p.m. His E Camino truck had an astroturf liner in the back. His life was OSU football. I believe Ryan Day is the best coach since Woody. His salary is in line with the other top coaches in the country. We have to ask the question: Why is a college football coach the highest paid person in a university? When I attended OSU (1976) the tuition was $400 a quarter. Speaking of inflation, we need to question why universities are over-charging students for tuition? Is it because they need to pay their football coach $10 million a year?

John Leahey

To John: The football coach is the highest paid person at a university when the market dictates it. And student tuition has nothing to do with Day's salary, as the athletic department is fully self-funded and receives no money from the state or student fees.

To the editor: I don’t root for OSU at all, but make all the money you can get. Good for him.

Chris DeGennaro

To Chris: For sure. I get the feeling that a lot of letter-writers won't be happy until Day turns down all the cash the school is offering him and works for Woody Hayes' salary.

To the editor: I thank all the rabid Ohio State fans who educated me with love, compassion, and good cheer as to my comments about the size of Ryan Day's salary. The Twitter trolls were especially kind and appreciative of my sagacious observations. I was happy to learn that even though coach Day earns over 22 times what President Biden's annual salary is that if coach Day wins he is worth it.

Michael N. Oser, Columbus

June 9, 2022; St. Albans, UK; (EDITORS NOTE: Photo is for use by U.S. and Canadian customers only) Team Hy Flyers Phil Mickelson of the U.S.  during the first round of the inaugural LIV golf invitational golf tournament at the Centurion Club. Mandatory Credit: Paul Childs-Action Images/Reuters via USA TODAY Sports
June 9, 2022; St. Albans, UK; (EDITORS NOTE: Photo is for use by U.S. and Canadian customers only) Team Hy Flyers Phil Mickelson of the U.S. during the first round of the inaugural LIV golf invitational golf tournament at the Centurion Club. Mandatory Credit: Paul Childs-Action Images/Reuters via USA TODAY Sports

On LIV Golf

Dear Mr. White: Winning a PGA tournament is a big deal: big bucks, coveted exemptions, loud jackets and hardware and your name etched on the wall of champions next to the likes of Hogan, Palmer, Nicklaus and Woods. Even if it’s the John Deere Classic, that wall is forever and represents one perk the LIV Tour can’t pump out of a barrelful of petro-dollars.

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Ratings for televised golf are anemic on a good day, and while I get why LIV will always lure golfers for hire (The Chronically Bored: DJ and Koepka(?); The Aggrieved: Garcia and Phil; The Lost: DeChambeau and Reed, and a gaggle of “I used to contend and now I’m all out to make the cut” types) who is going to watch 54-hole exhibitions where the combatants have already been paid and there are no loud jackets or gold-leaf champions walls at stake?

And speaking of the “I used to contend” crowd, Ricky Fowler, the upstart tour will continue to recruit top talent while limiting their fields to 48 players. The ongoing culling of the herd suggests some tenures on the tour could be very short LIV-ed.

Jon Armstrong, Columbus

To the editor: Dear Phil: Your new allegiance with the Saudis raises one simple question. Exactly how rich do you feel it's necessary to become?

The short answer: stupid rich.

John Meyer, Worthington

Grace Luo of Columbus Academy
Grace Luo of Columbus Academy

On OHSAA divisions

To the editor: Recently the OHSAA released new divisions for high school golf for the next two years. The lack of consideration for what is or isn’t fair is testimony to how obtuse the people who run that organization really are, that or they couldn’t care less.

The differential in the number of male students for the teams competing in Division II and III is approximately 125 boys each school has in grades 9,10 and 11. In Division I the differential is over 1,025, almost nine times what it is in the other divisions. So Bexley, with 280 boys in grades 9,10 and11 (eight over the limit of 272 for Division II) must compete against schools that have up to 1,300 male students in the same three grades.

Every kid who plays high school sports would ultimately like to win a state title, but with this type of disparity it is an impossible hill for many of them to climb. This has been brought up to the OHSAA for years but it falls on deaf ears as they refuse to seek a more equitable format. The terse response that has been given in the past “if you don’t like it then don’t play in the qualifying tournaments.”

Shame on them! For an organization that exists to promote sportsmanship, fair play and the overall development of children, they fall far short of their stated mission.

Jimmy Ryan, Canal Winchester 

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This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Letters: Ryan Day treated too harshly about his Ohio State salary